90 ..- : 'r:, .:,:; : ,? , '"/ 7 - f ,J ,>... , ',< f '" "" .. .., Ä ,:^' 4)t Ä "4 1-, " :' .. t ,- . .. ., *' .- y":< - '> ., . r ^'- "f' .(01'. "." .. ... -.: t+ .;.-'::. ,/)0< y .$ , '> y . ..:" t;.i" . ';\ r < ':>'7Y;" ,,1' .;;-i-;h ;' > ... ..",;. ';. 4 -:w' TO us, casual means never getting bent out of shape. Try this trick with most any other casual bag and It'll collapse But this IS Hartmann's Nouveau HObo, the only casual luggage with a bUilt- In Featherflex frame Our frame, with ItS square corners, allows you to pack and not waste any space. It also protects your gear from even the nastiest baggage , handler " * , $. ti f f 't ... l f. >] 7 { ... : .... 0/-" We don't cut corners ... .{ f . : . " .i . /. N?, ' C 14< ( .... DufuttTEFLON. water&st:æn repeller 'ê) 1982 Hartmann Luggage Lebanon Tennessee 37087 . .." .,,::..;:; . :'-\.'. :. .' :--. ,: 't ;.:'\ . ".'" ,,' : :' \' .:.... v........ . ,-; . ,,"r '.,:. l' ", " " ,", % ....-...;.'.,. j : :,: , :'''' ..:''' i ) \ <. .,. . ' :,:.... ,.... ' \ .:..^; 'N .. . , ì : ':: . :?,t l . , ''' " .:::'>> . ....,. : .-...... ... . :-". . .. 7> 1. " ':: .... '\' . ..... " " . " . .:^ . . . . , . ' . '.. ':." . ,; >> ..,., .'m The M ghïy Oyster The .'Oysterdate" by Rolex in stainless steel $575. DFFANY & CO. NEW YORK FIFTH AVENUE & 57TH STREET · ZIP: 10022 Nationwide toll-free, 800-526-0649. New Jersey toll-free 800-452-9146 Add any sales tax. American Express. Dmers Club · MasterCard. Visa Mr. Steinbrenner wrangled with his manager over which Yankees were to play at which positions during the spring exhibition games; so persist- ently hectored Lou Piniella as to sug- gest that some toll or tribute was being exacted for Sweet Lou's new three- year contract, signed last winter; belit- tled rookies who had performed poorly in a game; administered an angry tongue-lashing to three Yankee veter- ans for some trifling jokes they had made to a columnist about the stern aura in camp; ordered extra workouts and additional morning games for the squad on days after the team had lost a game; and announced his "great dis- pleasure" with Oscar Gamble after that stalwart had refused to be traded to Texas (for Al Oliver), as was his contractual right. During the winter, the Yankee players had been "invited" to come to Florida a full two weeks before any other clubs forgathered, with the promise of extra days off while in camp to relieve the tedium of a two-month training grind, but the days of rest were withdrawn one after the other, because of the troops' insuf- ficient zeal. When I got to Fort Lau- derdale, late in March, several Yankee players told me that they were flat-out exhausted The sweet-tempered Tommy John said, "It's been a woeful camp I can hardly wait for the season to start, so all this can end." Now the season had come, but no end was in sight. The new Yankees, in the won- derful phrase of the News columnist Mike Lupica, are Murmurers' Row N one of this is entirely new, to be sure, for Mr. Steinbrenner's brand of baseball and self-aggrandizement is very well known in sports by now, and it has a considerable following. "That George-he's somethtng!" one hears in cabs and at checkout counters, and at dinner tables, too. Likewise, "George sure likes to win-I'll say that for him." And "Old George un- derstands New York-we want win- ners here." And even "George loves New York. I think that's great." I heard this last from a member of a panel of sportswriters on a television show I was watching, and it puzzled me. Mr. Steinbrenner does not love New York well enough to live here- he is a resident of Tampa-and it comes as news to me, a lifelong resi- dent of the city, that we in New York enjoy or demand victory at any price. In fact, the exact opposite often seems true; our dogged adherence to the Rangers and the Knicks and, con brio, to the original Mets-and come to